Edward Snowden says he chose to give his first big U.S. TV interview to NBC News because it did "actual individual reporting" on what he felt were the issues his leaks raised.

You broke some of the stories. And they were about controversial issues. So while I don't know how this is going to show up on TV, I thought it was reasonable that, you know, you guys might give this a fair shake.

For starters, Snowden is a strong-willed sort unlikely to take interview orders from anyone, though his relationship with Greenwald is airtight (he’s in a just-published selfie with Greenwald & Co. in Russia). According to the network source, NBC News approached Snowden via several avenues, one of them being through Greenwald. Though Greenwald didn’t negotiate the terms of the agreement, the NBC News source concedes that Greenwald is among a small number of people who can assist in making contact with Snowden, who is living in Moscow.

As Mr. Williams described it, the back story of the interview contained its own quotient of cloak-and-dagger activity, including unannounced plane travel, lost luggage, hotel bookings under assumed names and two days sequestered in a room with a view of Red Square.

During his interview, Snowden said he's been spending part of his time in exile catching up on "The Wire."

Snowden found "The Wire"'s second season "not so great." He is wrong on this point: The second season is the best one. (Also, if he was hoping journalists might spend Wednesday evening discussing the substance of his interview on Twitter, he shouldn't have mentioned a show many of them are obsessed with.)

.@DJBentley Like everyone else, Snowden will eventually come around on season two.

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AUTHOR INFORMATION

Andrew Beaujon reported on the media for Poynter from 2012 to 2015. He was previously arts editor at TBD.com and managing editor of Washington City Paper. He's the author of the 2006 book "Body Piercing Saved My Life," about Christian rock and evangelical Christian culture.